In countries where the native-born workforce is concentrated in medium- and high-skilled industries, many low-wage jobs—from child and elder care to agriculture and construction—are filled by immigrants. Yet few legal migration pathways exist for such workers. Most employment-based channels are geared instead toward highly skilled professionals with formal qualifications. Where legal pathways for low-skilled migrants are too narrow to meet demand, employers and foreign-born workers alike often look to illegal migration to bridge the gap.

As states meet to negotiate a Global Compact for Safe, Orderly, and Regular Migration in 2018, they have pledged to consider opportunities to foster safer and better-managed international migration—including by facilitating labor mobility across the skills spectrum. This brief examines the legal migration pathways currently available to low-skilled workers, identifying promising practices as well as policy gaps.

Such pathways take a variety of forms and are created to serve a range of policy aims, from deterring illegal migration to reducing deaths along unmanaged routes and supporting international development goals. Legal channels also vary depending on the duration, geography, and sector of the migration in question. While some paths are available for workers in temporary and seasonal occupations, such as agriculture, few exist in female-dominated fields, such as child and elder care.

“Among the key challenges policymakers will need to address,” the authors write, “are the need to improve coordination between destination and origin countries, balance clarity of program design with flexibility, and weave the protection of workers’ rights and the evaluation of impact into the fabric of new initiatives.”

In the Spotlight

"As policymakers revisit the ways they manage migration, their deliberations would profit from a realistic view of the benefits legal channels offer both low-skilled migrant workers and destination countries."

The user-friendly guide, a project of MPI and the International Organization for Migration (IOM), offers a strategic road map for governments to build a constructive relationship with diasporas and examines the success and failure of policies, programs, and initiatives undertaken to date.

International Program

Migrants, Migration, and Development

MPI's Migrants, Migration, and Development Program focuses on the intersection of migration and development policies and trends, moving beyond simple notions that development is a “cure” for migration or that migration is a recipe for development.